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Changes brought about in syntagm, paradigm, associations, and social changes result in changing of a language.
Since language constructs prtray our worldview, any paradigmatic change in theory or practice or scientific inquiry, will bring about a paradigmatic change in language with the inclusion of new words and metaphors.

Topic Sentence 2: The conversion of the English by St Augustine to Christianity in 597 which introduced the influence of Latin on Old English and the linking of the English culture with mainstream Europe through the Synod of Whitby in 664 proved to be salient influence on the development of the Old English.…

Topic Sentence 3: In an analysis of the linguistic features of the Early Modern English in connection with the language of Shakespearean plays, it becomes obvious that the language used by Shakespeare belongs to the early years of Modern English and there is nothing standard about the orthography in Shakespearean English, a feature he shared with the Early Modern English.…

Topic Sentence 2: There have been significant evidences which suggest that Milton "tried to indicate a distinction in spelling, for instance, between the stressed and the unstressed forms of the personal pronouns - mee, hee, shee, and their for the emphatic forms, and me, he, she, thir, for the weaker ones." (Wrenn, 170-1)…